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Show PAROWAN TIMES, PAROWAN, UTAH TO CONTRACTORS NOTICE THE PAROWAN TIMES U. S. PUBLISHED WEEKLY by th PRINTING CO PAROWAN PUB. RoUrt B. MiIchtlL Publuhtr. Mgr. 7a ?.r::nr v. f.. Nation Billions Will Pay 23- . OnH a IV.md For M3.0D Tor.. t, I intercd m Second Clam Mad Matter at the Post Office at Parowan, Utah. October 27, 1915. The following applications have been filed with the State Engineer to appropi late water in Iron County, State of Utah, throughout the entue all year, unless otherwise designate, SDRAM. from locations being 17269- - Roy P. Urie, Cellar City. Utah. 2 sec. ft. of water for irrigation well bet 260 and use from a OO F.. a at 300 ft. deep point N.45deg 95 ft from Sl'4Cor. Sec 33, T34S, R17W. The water will bo Used from 160 acApril I to Sept. 30 to irrigate Sec. SEL4 in embraced res of land H-i- 33, T34S, R17W. 17415 Donald II. Vance, Modem, Utah, 2 sec. ft of water for irrigation well bet 150 and use from a 350 ft. deep at a point S 2600 ft. and W. 2640 ft from NE. Cor Sec. 15, T3IS, R13W. The water will be used from March to November to irrin igate 80 acres of land embraced R13W. NE.14 Sec. 19, T31S, 17416 Donald H. Vance, Mxlena, Utah, 2 sec ft. of water for irrigation well bet 150 and use from a 350 ft. deep at a point S. 1300 ft. and 16-i- 1 1 16-i- n ft. from NE. Cor. Sec. 19, T31S, R13W. The water will be used from March 1 to November 1 to irrigate 80 acres of land embraced in Sec. 19, T31S.R19W. 17417 Donald H Vance, Modena, Utah, 2 Sec. ft. of water for irrigation well bet. 150 purposes from a a at 350 ft. and point S. 2600 ft. deep and W.4930 ft. from NE. Cor. Sec. 19 T31S, R13W. The water will be used from March 1 to Nov. 1 to irrigate 80 acres of land in SI '2 NW14 Sec. 19, T31S, R13W. 17694 United States of America, U.S. Grazing Service, P. O. Box 1046, Salt Lake City, Utah, .045 sec. ft. of purposes water for stock from a drilled well, equipped with gas engine, at a point S. 10,808 ft. W. 659.2 ft. from Nl; 4 Cor. Sec. 2, T3fS. i. V. 4930 16-i- R7W. Optometrists Pledge Their Eyes to Bank Three PITTSBURGH. dred optometrists agreed at vention sessions here to bequeath their eyes to eye banks" so that their careers of vision improvement would continue after death. Members of Beta Sigma Kappa, honorary optomctric fraternity, meeting here in connection huncon- with convention American sessions Optomctric of the associa- tion, pledged their eyes to the aid of diseased persons and ac- cident victims at the suggestion of their president, Dr. H E. Pine of Chicago. These men spend their lives improving vision, Dr. Pine asserted, "what better means to improve peoples sight exists than this method? Dr. Pine said recent development of new refrigerating methods made large-scalparticipation in a system of "eye banks" practical and efficient. e 12-i- n. ft.-an- h, 12-i- E. 2590 ft. from NW Cor. T32S, R8W. The water will from April 1 to Dec. 1 to 120 acres of land embraced 13, T32S, R8W. 17863 Thomas R. Sec. 13, be used irrigate in Sec. Abbott, Para-gona- Utah, 2.5 sec. ft. of water for irrigation purposes from a 12-i- n well bet. 200 and 400 ft. deep at a point N. 66 ft. and E. 600 ft. from S4 Cor. Sec. 21 T33S, R8W. The water will be used from Apr. 1 to Oct. 30to irrigate 160 acres of land embraced in Secs. 21 and 28, T33S, R8W, and for year round incidental stock watering and domestic use. Protests resisting any of the foregoing applicitions with reasons there for, must be in affidavit form with extra copy filed with the State 403 State Capitol, Salt Lake City 1, Utah on or before October r, 7, 1946. ED. H.WATSON State Engineer Probate and Guardianship Notice For Further Information Consult the Clerk of the District Court or Signers Res-pcti- NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the matter of the Estate of FREEMAN W. PENDLETON ceased. de- Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at his residence at Parowan Iron, County. State of Utah on or before the 25th day of October AD 1946. Dated this 23id day of August A , D. 1946. WARREN PENDLETON Administrator A M. MARSDEN Attorney for Administrator Parowan, Utah First Publication Aug. 23, 1946 Last Publication Sept 13 1946 V i ! ' J si truck and other parately tory. In a book called Apes, Giants Dr. Weidenreich told and Man, of recent discoveries of a fossilized giant human jawbone in Java and a huge human tooth found in China. It may not be too far from the truth if we suggest the Java giant was much bigger than any living gorilla and that the Chinese giant was correspondingly bigger than the Java giant that is 14 times as large as the Java giant and twice as large as a male gorilla, he said. He added there were only "mere indications" thus far that the giants were older than all other known human types and expressed hope that the search for fossils could be continued in Java and China now that the war in the Pacific has ended. 100,000 Deaths Blamed On Systematic Starvation BERLIN. The Red army newspaper Taeghche Rundschau blamed overwork, systematic starvation and epidemics for the deaths of Farmer Looks Up at Plane, Sees Grandma in Cockpit A PITTSBURGH small silver monoplane svvonpi i over hay stacks and banked mt i a turn above a farm at nc.ubv O' haw. A young man in Uo ban void looked up and exiiaimet It s o it ,o. pi m of the Vit clai.c grandma. ikirg the hnp- a.r of Mrs. Anna o open cotkp.t , -t Haitmnn, e .. a-- tuk n g i bt quasi-offici- I ! ' ! ,1. r "I.- hi .it: i r t i elaborate electrical er t J 1 I MORRIS Probate and Guardianship .Notice IM of!...1' '. F Fuither Information Consult the ..n, U k of District Court or Respect-.- v nt i ni in h. ' "a' f. i e c! ueti Signers. "f the F..I' I. the p NOTICE TO CREDITORS (52 s: a b. Stand., d. Ait if 9 in the Matter of the Estate of 10 " WILLIAM H. CLARK, Dcseased. " I'!. Ill, and ap if. e. ill 'll' Ci editors will present claims with .f the St.ite R file III the " viuehois to the undersigned at her . t .tike V, Cell m idencc at Parowan, Iron County, of DM. n t Fu nr. the f f St.de of Utah, on or before the 23rd v ll City. I tab vchi'i ' 'uy .dev of September, A. D. 1946. Ini Id. bv p Dated the 18th day of July, A. D. I C!-- 11 i . I f. - -- 'ni'-i-n- . U - 1 C I i.Epi i .fi'-ti- t plan- - will b- City , on ii !' be I & MATHES0X 3 ABBTRJtS' Affiliated SECURITY TITltd Office Court Houtt IW WOOD in the lck or COAL for sale, See Cug telephone 2313, Parowan COAL LOR SALE u, uTT load lots. Harrell Dalton P,a For Tha Bm -. p' f'iii.i I ' S d a ; i f p.i.d LIFE AUTOMOBILE 4 m.i RU0 PEARL C. DAVENPORT, .. fun it d. p1 -- v id.n : hi ie a' mil an .u i'e;',-il)'t'l'UC b.d, and the plans within Mmo dav-tb.- e af: opening of t)id- - Eat li b i Id r nn-- t subn it a htti r fit m an on "- ved suiety company gn, ,inli . n I ! L A I I FIRE R MORRIS & MATIIESQN, 0 WU RHEUMATISM and ARTE' Administratrix -- i - W. - - SURETY I. -- an ' ' ' to juj INSURANCE - r I T j-- H. C. Parcel LICENSED I i a' READER Poland now has cion of 23.622.334. Lodz is the t city, with 496.000 has 476.000, Cracow and Poznan 268,000. land's prewar population was n b.i ..ml !! i i 7th diy Attorney fu: Adm:n..j. Bank of Southern Luh p Cedar City, Utah. II SAW. i V.-.- , s GERTRUD Population Now Top 23 Million Mark Out of the total population, 16,-ii.uoo people are peasants and live in towns and cities. A of 5,012,000 now inhabit Po-1- . id .i s new western territories. b.h i Dated D. 1946, L.RHUWO. i i prJ will to th und4 at PfcrTOa State of Utah, on or dayoflWinbcr.AD K) ,:t i - I suffeied for yeam thankful that I found Attorneys for Administratrix P ink of Southern Utah Building, Cedar Citv, Utah. this terrible affliction gladly answer anyone pective signers. mestic housework cir rtLtf that wrt: for information. Mrs. Aar a?. Probate and Guardainship Notice P.O. Box 825. Vancouver. I, F.ir Further Information Consult the Pd. Adv. NUE-OVLife Clerk of the District Court, or Res- WlANTED: Married couple ir TO CREDITORS In the Matter of the Estate of ERNEST FLINT GREEN, deceased. Creditors will present their claims with vouchers attached to the v ill annexed at the offices of Cline, Wilson and Cline, his attorneys, at Milford. Utah, on or before the 25th dav of October, 1946. Ib.b'd this 17th day of August A. NOTICE Not Well Protected. Poli. e Chief Fred A. Roff of Morristown, N. J., president of the International Association of Chiefs of I uvivmii'imi lilt'MIll.UUMl IIM ' Police, declared recently: be secured at the office nf the St.ite . . "The upsurge in crime could not Road Commissmn attain its present proportions if the Dated this 29 day of August, 1946. goods being stolen were better proSTATE ROAD COMMISSION tected. And that is something beOF UTAH yond our control. We can enter the picture only after the loss is inby Ray H. Leavitt, Chairmai curred. Prior to that, the situation is entirely in your hapds and you can do much, if you will, to meet this situation and prevent many of these losses. Increasing attention is being focussed on lock-u- p and alarm devices for the trucks. In one 1946 alarm system, Creditou voucher, residence 2' " 'I : e j th. . iv: NATHANclt inhabit-Warsa- j infor- has become a motion center, reported 300 truck tin ft with a total merchandise value of $2,500,000 and estimated that this figure was only 10 per cent take in the last of the nation-widyear. Quick Market for Loot. It was pointed out that because of the shortages of most civilian goods stolen merchandise has a ready market. The main technique of grabbing shipments is not the hijack where-- i m blazing guns halt a speeding truck on a rural road, but the more stealthy "jump." Jack Seide, pres-- 1 ldent of Babaco, estimates that 85 per cent of the losses result from the "jump" and figures that 99 per cent of the crimes are committed in urban centers. The "jump" consists of seizing a vehicle when it has stopped preparatory to unloading or when parked overnight, driving it off to a ren-- 1 dezvous, rifling the contents and 'abandoning it. Textile shippers are the principal victims of truck thefts and hijackings. Value of such cargoes is about 39 per cent of the total for the last year, with liquor shipments next, then clothing and tobacco products. Furs also are a favored target, and food, yarns, unfinished piece goods, tires and phonograph records are getting plenty of atten- , f i merit thefts, and the insurance mediali L firms providing coverage still ore be SI f pretty muih in a period of rugged- vv;i,,(. ( ,,j individualism. An analysis recent- ,(jj k ly compiled by Balaco Alarm Sys-- : ' ' tcins company of Now York, which n i jag V.M. BURNS, in subnsi lake. Cooking, General haae gardening. Good wages, quarters, deed Miller, 2i or MI ker Bank Bldg. Canyon, Holladay pr.it-in- 92-J- HELP WANTED: C: tunity of lifetime supply! MALE -t and other profitable farmers in Iron County. ience or capital required auto and good references Pr ent. Write or Wire MsNessCx prod- Nc M- Administrator with Will annexed. Dept. D, 2423 7, California. First Publication: Aug. 23 1946 Last Publication: Sept. 13, 1946. Magnolia St.Ca de- in possibly a vices, booby-trappe- d dozen spots, stall the trucks motor and let loose a banshee siren which can wail for hours. The jammed engine prevents moving the vehicle, but it is the noise that gets the lion's share of the high-power- iTi That fields a Giant Stalactite U- p- credit. 11 Years on Liquid Diet, Boy, 13, Dies in Home GLENFORD, OHIO. Byron E. Hetrick, 13, who existed the last 11 years on a liquid diet after he lapsed into a coma at the age of two, died at his home here without regaining consciousness. The youths parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clovd G. Hetrick, said he was stricken with "sleeping sickness in 1935 as he suffered from whooping THE tons-heav- stalactite y the giant Engine! icicle i of stone attractive tight to its cavern roof by the tremendous the force force of molecules pulling up against gravity. Utilizing together of molecular attraction (basic force that holds things Conoco scientists bring to Americas motorists the benefits new and better oils. 1 boys death. N By molecular attraction, a special ingredient of Conoco that motor oil is bonded so strongly throughout your engine United States Soldier Kills Red Border Guard Tar Eighteen-Year-Ol- d Marries Chums Mother TENN. KNOXVILLE, - A v r i I j r .,1 K , J - V' 1 !iW?i cylinder walls and other parts are molecular attraction holds Conoco And beca' oil-plate- it up where crankcsse' the from all draining down to oil-platin- g belongs ... prevents it even overnight ... you get these benefits: added protection when your engine starts up added protection from corrosive action added protection from wear that leads to fouling sludge and carbon i 1 J ft--- - lr;-- : H added smooth, silent miles Thats why to now at Your Conoco Merchants. Look for the red triangle. Continental Oil CofflP oil-plat- e ... CONOCO ro- mance which grew out of an sailors visit with her son has culminated m marriage fir the serviceman and a Knoxville grandmother. The newlyweds Walter A Hall Jr. of Broiklyn, N. Y., and tie former Mrs. Neon.u Baldwin of Knoxville are horn mooning m house. Your Oll-PIAT-ES cough and pneumonia. Bronchial pneumonia was given by physicians as the cause of the HEIDELBERG. An American soldier shot and killed a Russian re th graves, the newspaper said, have sentry on the American-Sovie- t zonal border in Germany after the Rus-just been discovered. The graves were found at a for- sian bayoneted a German woman mer German prison camp near on the United States side of the Zeitham, Saxony, in the Russian oc- line, the Third army provost mar- cupation one. The piisoners were shal announced. The announcement said United mostly Russian In the camp hospital, States and Soviet authorities had 50,000 priseneis had lam ill and determined that the American con- unattended and with their only exit stabulary trooper fired in when the Russian charged the mass grave," the newspaper him with a fixed bayonet. reported. Gocd g There vv py face a" minmnr ship- - V,' , - tion. 0- Wallace E. Limb, 498N. 3rd Cedar City, Utah, 3 sec. ft of West, wrter for irrigation use from a well bet. 200 and 300 ft. deep at a E. 1320 ft. from point S. 50 NW Cor. Sec. 13, T32S, R8W. The will be used from April 1 to Man Once Was Larger 1 to irrigate 80 acres of land Dec. Gorillas Giant Than 13, Sec. of in NW14 Nl2 embraced CHICAGO. Evidence that some T32S.R8W, and for year round stock of modern mans earliest ancestors watering. may have been giants ranging up 3rd. 498N. V. 1783- 2- Urban Limb, to twice the size of a male gorilla West, Cedar City, Utah, 3 sec. ft of was disclosed by Dr. Franz Weiden-reicwell bet. 150 and research associate of the water from a 250 ft. deep at a point S. 1370 ft. and American Museum of Natural His- 1781- Poland I I I y, t. . I n, cav-i.b- i F. , to , I 1 - NOTICE the In ' ' - i 1 -- s i i im-pa- rg ta-hi- e-- the great purrhaais if : abler The base rice w.i- d. 'tiled as being for "nuirbi r IX rd bed smoked sheet" Oiler giab-- . will be paid fur at annul d.ffei ", tls. by This raw rubber, ui'a the U. S. Rubier Deveb pmt r.t will be male av.o'.ible to American manufacture! ti t' igh government outlet ugem The olticial statement sail tiat determining factors in t' e a gi cements reached were the em.tir u ng shortage of natural rubber in relation to demand and the present exceptionally high cost of prudje-in- g natural rubber in these areas." The United States obtains the great bulk of its raw rubber fmin British, Dutch and Fiench Fjr Eastern production but some is coming from such scattered places as South America, Siam, the Philippines and Afiica. l.iellt.f.l d a- - 1 d' Highway bandits t. F 27 5 m on the public S are bard-t.vget Heins by Th- - h ng'h .f cnee f r loot. eg tru. ks of everything from t t.d oVl d Anything textiles to nr cream. ' !t " im the ' and every thug, except maybe sew; 2 i 5 5 lv a- - f oXi'liati er pije, is It mg hijacked today," pi .0.1 T If, 111 M '' savs a representative of trucking R.tumiM" is ; .. i .. v! ( R o: k , Vi uslu d interests. 165 to Y Police, lnrurance and truck as- Su'fice Coll' the sociation oll.cials say that .iv.it: "t I'n, ijfi.-.- t few months have seen a sizable in- !..' , f i ,i j, crease in the frequency, value and n- .v d to the Sim d ' daring of such robberies. The main th. .' ui'.i'U centers of trouble are New York, mg the Mibbtt.n.; v. 'I -p I ,mn. Chicago nnd Philadelphia. to M th I n V Accurate reports are difficult Th- cbt.un because Federal Bureau of b..!i - M - a I" Investigation does not catalogue i I ' I NOTICE TO WATER USERS eu-e- b ! NEW YORK. - . u dut turns of the painting !.,,( adorned bars throughout the t Id w through distribution by the r Busch Brewing company. A. n official of the brewery esti-i- . , d more than 150.000 copies of I' .Hiding have been distributed. An epted ac counts are that Adol-Busch Sr., grandfather of the i to :.'s present head, paid a St. Louis mi keeper $30,000 for the picture ; io preset. ted it to the seventh the regiment of General Cus-and his men who died in the 1K7G massacre. ll-- ' District ive Signeij. fainting of "Custer's Last was destroyed by a ftre at Kent B oss Oil'ters club st El sit., ,nd Cuttj 'rk OfHa; ; Bandits Growing Bolder as a 2 no n U ': I. Make 'SO fa.'d Goods Shortages t .1. that Salable. More Loot tut Welti Nl W t ( i ' lank,, M.id" - NATIONAL EDITORIAL -- Fire IX Hijacking Costs I!:trr:! Rtiibar rs te.l WXSIUNGD N S'i oOtJ Stai'5 has I fmin i f tons long ' 2 11 i ' at.Britain, Fi 1, .If of cents per poov dc- i ,) t this year, a ' partfr.er.t .iiiii'n.The price, v. L i up cents above t1 la'a ' Hart n to July 1. T! is ,r w domestic pri cs of i. ' r i g',v n have to be ita v a - r 'dy eminent will have to to maintain t e puri-I' rjm-i,ni- nt Joint ant.ouM in London sa, i that Bnta.n. while ra.v rubber reopening the Malayan vvoulJ market to tie I'n.te I States. stabilize corl.t. ns tl.ire I . i'ing a a price equivalent to 23' (t-'pound for all available i Britain and the th it' i S' tes are I'M' MPILMBH: V CONOCO V MOTOR 0L "Better orpmte |